The euro up slightly against the dollar after the ECB

The euro up slightly against the dollar after the ECB
The euro up slightly against the dollar after the ECB

London (awp/afp) – The single currency rose slightly on Thursday against the dollar despite the ECB’s rate cut, its president suggesting that the institute should exercise caution in terms of monetary policy.

Around 2:00 p.m. GMT (4:00 p.m. CET), the euro gained 0.17% against the greenback, to 1.0887 dollars per euro.

After an unprecedented phase of monetary tightening, the European Central Bank (ECB) began to lower its key rates on Thursday. Serving as a reference, the rate on deposits increased from 4% to 3.75%.

The last ECB rate cut was almost five years ago, in September 2019.

The market particularly scrutinized the intervention of the President of the ECB, Christine Lagarde, who should set the tone for the institution’s next monetary policy meetings.

Inflation is falling again in the euro zone, but “the coming months will continue to be turbulent,” Ms. Lagarde said on Thursday, suggesting that the institute should exercise caution in terms of rate policy.

There are “bumps in the road that may come as a surprise” and “that we’re not entirely sure of [l’]magnitude,” added the central banker.

“ECB policymakers should now press the pause button as sticky inflation has once again become a Source of concern,” notes Susannah Streeter, analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

Disinflation is indeed continuing a bumpy path in the euro zone. From a peak of 10.6% over one year in October 2022, inflation fell to 2.4% in March and April, before rebounding slightly to 2.6% in May.

“While rates have gone up like a rocket, they are likely to come back down in a jigsaw fashion,” says Ms. Streeter.

Thursday lessons Wednesday lessons

————————————

2:00 p.m. GMT 9:00 p.m. GMT

EUR/USD 1.0887 1.0869

EUR/JPY 169.93 169.68

EUR/CHF 0.9704 0.9711

EUR/GBP 0.8516 0.8500

USD/JPY 156.09 156.12

USD/CHF 0.8914 0.8935

GBP/USD 1.2784 1.2787

emb/ved/LyS

-

-

PREV What to remember from the first debate for the American presidential election
NEXT angry protests in Africa are the new normal